POP QUIZ!!
• What does “Unity of Command” mean when it comes to Fayol’s 14 principles of management?
• What about “Initiative”?• M. P. Follett was concerned that mgt was
ignoring the __________ side of the situation.• What was the result of the Hawthorne study?
(SUPER brief)
POP QUIZ!!• What does “Unity of Command” mean when it
comes to Fayol’s 14 principles of management?– Employees should have one boss
• What about “Initiative”?– Employees should be encouraged to act on their
own.• M. P. Follett was concerned that mgt was
ignoring the HUMAN side of the situation.• What was the result of the Hawthorne study?
(SUPER brief)– Employees like (positive) attention.
The Evolution of Management
Thought
chapter twolecture 3
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Theory X and Theory Y
Douglas McGregor proposed two different sets of assumptions about workers.
• Theory X – A set of negative assumptions about workers that
leads to the conclusion that a manager’s task is to supervise workers closely and control their behavior.
2-4
Theory X and Theory Y
• Theory Y – A set of positive assumptions about workers that
leads to the conclusion that a manager’s task is to create a work setting that encourages commitment to organizational goals and provides opportunities for workers to be imaginative and to exercise initiative and self-direction.
2-5
Theory X vs. Theory Y
2-6Figure 2.3
Management Science Theory
• Management Science Theory– Contemporary approach to management that
focuses on the use of rigorous quantitative techniques to help managers make maximum use of organizational resources to produce goods and services.
2-7
Management Science Theory
• Quantitative management – utilizes mathematical techniques, like linear
programming, modeling, simulation and chaos theory
• Operations management – provides managers a set of techniques they can
use to analyze any aspect of an organization’s production system to increase efficiency
2-8
Management Science Theory
• Total quality management – focuses on analyzing an organization’s input,
conversion, and output activities to increase product quality
• Management information systems – help managers design systems that provide
information that is vital for effective decision making
2-9
Organizational Environment Theory
• Organizational Environment – The set of forces and conditions that operate
beyond an organization’s boundaries but affect a manager’s ability to acquire and utilize resources
2-10
The Open-Systems View
• Open System– A system that takes resources for its external
environment and transforms them into goods and services that are then sent back to that environment where they are bought by customers.
2-11
The Open-Systems View
• Input stage – organization acquires resources such as raw materials,
money, and skilled workers to produce goods and services
• Conversion stage – inputs are transformed into outputs of finished goods
• Output stage – finished goods are released to the external
environment
2-12
The Organization as an Open System
2-13Figure 2.4
The Open-Systems View
• Closed system – A self-contained system that is not affected by
changes in its external environment.– Likely to experience entropy and lose its ability to
control itself
2-14
The Open-Systems View
• Synergy – the performance gains that result from the
combined actions of individuals and departments– Possible only in
an organized system
2-15
Contingency Theory
• Contingency Theory– The idea that the organizational structures and
control systems manager choose are contingent on characteristics of the external environment in which the organization operates.
– “There is no one best way to organize”
2-16
Contingency Theory
2-17
Figure 2.5
Type of Structure
• Mechanistic Structure– An organizational structure in which authority is
centralized, tasks and rules are clearly specified, and employees are closely supervised.
2-18
Type of Structure
• Organic Structure– An organizational structure in which authority is
decentralized to middle and first-line managers and tasks and roles are left ambiguous to encourage employees to cooperate and respond quickly to the unexpected
2-19